Cinema-goers are terrified by scare prank poster for The Woman in Black: Angel of Death

There may be just two days to go until Christmas, but the marketing team behind The Woman in Black sequel are bringing festive terror to cinemagoers.

The entertaining prank sees innocent film fans scared out of their wits when a promo poster for Tom Harper’s Angel of Death comes to life. Their screams are deafening, not that we can blame them – take a look at the video below.

Set in England in 1941, the film sees two teachers evacuate a group of schoolchildren to the abandoned Eel Marsh House for refuge from the blitz.

Little do they know that an evil far more frightening awaits them when their arrival awakens the Woman in Black, who "never forgives, never forgets and never left".

Best horror films of all-time

Best horror films of all-time

1/10
The Shining

The retailer play.com used a heart rate monitor on film watchers to assess what horror films set pulses racing. The ‘Here’s Johnny’ scene in which Jack Nicholson peers through a hole in a door he has just created with an axe came up on top.

The rest of the film isn’t any less scary as a writer coops his family up in an empty Colorado hotel for the winter.

Stanley Kubrick creates tension at every turn, especially when he follows Danny riding his bicycle along the corridors.

2/10
Rosemary's Baby

It involves a struggling couple, a pregnant Catholic girl and unemployed actor, played by Mia Farrow and John Cassavetes, who move into an apartment block and are befriended by Satanist.

The occult is scary, but not nearly as evil as Guy’s decision to sacrifice his wife for an acting role.

Polanski’s brilliance is that the horror is not the supernatural but the doubts that brew up in our own minds. Paranoia reigns.

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3/10
Psycho

There is a sense of foreboding even before petty thief Vera Miles checks into the Bates motel.

Then we are introduced to Norman Bates and his Oedipus complex.

The fact that Bates on the surface seems mild-mannered and ordinary only made his transformation scarier. Showers would never be the same, in the must iconic murder scene on celluloid.

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4/10
Blue Velvet

The huge amount of film noir elements in the narrative of David Lynch’s murder tale often see this 1986 American tale overlooked on horror lists.

But this film is aimed to chill and has the aesthetics, pacing and tension of the greatest horror, including severed ears, dwarfs, and the supernatural.

But it’s Dennis Hopper’s Frank Booth that is the clincher, whenever he’s on screen, whether he’s harassing Isabelle Rossellini or encouraging singing, he’s the scariest character that has ever been on-screen.

5/10
Nosferatu - A Symphony of Horror

The granddaddy of the genre, this silent masterpiece, an unauthorised adaptation of the Dracula tale (The Stoker estate won a case ordering all copies of the film destroyed, which was thankfully unenforceable in Germany), sees director FW Murnau establish many of the touchstones of the genre including vampires lusting after blood

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6/10
The Orphanage

The haunted house is a staple of horror movies, especially of American horror.

But it’s this Spanish gem from 2007 that is the scariest of them all. It starts with a mother whose attempts to deal with her childhood inner demons seeking closure by buying the orphanage in which she was born, and taking on the demands of looking after not just her own imaginative adopted son, but six other Orphans.

What ensues is an eerie homage to Jack Clayton’s The Innocents that once again proves that nothing is as scary on film as creepy children.

7/10
Anti-Christ

Lars von Trier’s says it was while he was undergoing cognitive therapy for depression that the idea to make a film exploring the semiotics and tools used by depression came to mind.

Charlotte Gainsbourg and Willem Dafoe play a couple coping with the death of their son.

She cannot belief his response and he hers. The result is a film featuring gender mutilation, talking foxes and where chaos reigns. Booed at Cannes only seems to cement its status.

8/10
Don't Look Now

Adaptations of Daphne du Maurier’s prose have a habit of making great horror films, especially in the hands of Alfred Hitchcock (Birds and Rebecca).

British director Nic Roeg created this masterpiece when he took Maurier’s short story and meshed it with his trademark non-linear approach to the story of parents attempting to come to terms with the death of their young daughter by moving to Venice.

Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie give career best performances in a film that has a clairvoyant, serial killer, but most scary of all, feelings of guilt.

9/10
Suspiria

There are not many directors who have made more horrors than Italian maestro Dario Argento. His 1976 effort Suspiria remains his masterpiece.

An American ballet dancer goes to study in the Black Forest, where she meets a pair of lesbians administrators (Alida Valli and Joan Bennett), a bizarre shrink (Udo Kier, an actor who adds to the terror level of any movie) and discovers that the school was once a notorious witches’ coven.

All this done in piercing Technicolor and a terrific synthesised score.

10/10
Audition

J-Horror (Japanese horror) went through a purple patch at the end of the 90s with Hideo Nakata’s excellent Dark Water follow Ring trilogies.

However, the most chilling film of the era was directed by Takeshi Miike, who makes films like they are cups of morning coffee.

He uses the casting couch as the source of his evil as a friend tries to find a television producer a new wife by hosting a fake casting call.

Miike slowly pulls us into the tale, as we discover dark secrets of both the widower and the actress who has caught his eye.